Special Agent Gregory Bretzing's Murder Incorporated of LaVoy Finicum

All hell is literally breaking loose in the FBI and in the Oregon Office as Inspector General Michael Horowitz has opened up an immense investigation of criminal wrongdoing by the FBI in the murder of LaVoy Finicum.

For those who taunted the Finicum family for not releasing the autopsy report they have, the reality is damning against the FBI and Oregon State police and whoever else in this Bretzing Shootfest was peppering LaVoy Finicum with lead.

We now have absolute proof that LaVoy Finicum was shot 3 times in the back. We know one of these shots pierced Mr. Finicums heart, and this is why he went down like the life was knocked out of him, and he recovered for a time, as he was still alive.
I will repeat the fact posted here, that if LaVoy Finicum would have received prompt medical attention, he would have lived. It is criminal homicide for the FBI to have left Mr. Finicum to bleed out while laying on the snow for 10 minutes as they blasted the Americans in the vehicle who were showing no resistance at all.

This becomes even worse, as there is absolute evidence now that the FBI KNEW information on the strafing of the Finicum pick up, and Gregory Bretzing covered it up and lied to the American people. The FBI was firing at LaVoy Finicum from overhead in hitting his pick up as he was attempting to surrender.

That is why Mr. Finicum was scolding them about shooting him if they were going to kill him as that was the FBI's intent.

This degrades to something far worse and criminal as the FBI was shooting at LaVoy Finicum and then at least 5 agents covered up these shots fired, and attempted to place the blame on the murder of LaVoy Finicum entirely on the Oregon State Police.

The bullets didn't hit Finicum and didn't contribute to his death,
but now all five unnamed agents, part of an elite national unit, are
under criminal investigation by the U.S. Justice Department. Inspector
General Michael Horowitz is leading the independent inquiry.

Worse yet, we now know that it was not one Oregon Trooper but several who were spraying lead at this old cowboy in LaVoy Finicum.
There were apparently at least 10 law enforcement shooting at an unarmed man, with his hands in the air, in deep snow and attempting to surrender.

The remarkable disclosure came as a team of local investigators
released findings that two state troopers shot Finicum three times in
the back during the chaotic scene at a police roadblock Jan. 26.

The full story I will post below but it is absolutely damning of the FBI and the buck stops completely with Special Agent Gregory Bretzing, who bragged about his multi level operation against these Patriots, and is criminally responsible for the mayhem which was unleashed.
The reality is due to two known moles who have been outed, the FBI knew the Bundy Group were about to leave the Refuge in evacuating it within a week. The Bundy Group were on their way to see the Grant County Sheriff, where they all could have been taken into custody, and ended this without bloodshed. We now have the evidence that the FBI in Oregon was so out of control that it became Murder Incorporated.

The District Attorney of Harney County in Tim Colahan can continue to try and blame the victim murdered in LaVoy Finicum, but the reality is that if the Inspector General does his job, there is going to be room for the Congressional Investigations which are required for this murder and mass intimidation of Americans which has been unleashed.

This needs to be under Grand Jury investigation and indictment now, and the reality is that if Randy Weaver's family being murdered by the BATFE and FBI at Ruby Ridge was a 100 million dollar Civil Law Suit, the murder of LaVoy Finicum is a billion dollar law suit.
What is taking place now is the Inspector General's investigation has the potential of freeing the entire Bundy Group, as it reveals a madness by this entire FBI operation.

BEND – An FBI agent is suspected of lying about firing twice at
Robert "LaVoy" Finicum and may have gotten help from four other FBI
agents in covering up afterward, authorities revealed Tuesday.
The bullets didn't hit Finicum and didn't contribute to his death,
but now all five unnamed agents, part of an elite national unit, are
under criminal investigation by the U.S. Justice Department. Inspector
General Michael Horowitz is leading the independent inquiry.
The remarkable disclosure came as a team of local investigators
released findings that two state troopers shot Finicum three times in
the back during the chaotic scene at a police roadblock Jan. 26. One
bullet pierced his heart, an autopsy showed.
A prosecutor ruled the fatal shooting was legally justified, saying
state law allows use of deadly force when officers believe a person is
about to seriously injure or kill someone. Finicum kept moving his hands
toward a pocket that contained a loaded handgun. Although he was shot
from behind, Finicum had a trooper in front of him armed with a Taser
who was thought to be in danger.

Finicum, 54, an Arizona rancher, was one of the leaders of the Jan. 2
takeover of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge near Burns.
Investigators gave no details to explain why the one FBI agent, a
member of the Hostage Rescue Team, wouldn't report the two shots.
They also didn't indicate what his four colleagues did to warrant
investigation other than saying it was related to conduct after the
shooting.
"The question of who fired these shots has not been resolved," said
Greg Bretzing, special agent in charge of the FBI in Portland. The
federal agency is cooperating with the inspector general's
investigation, he said at a news conference.

The revelation is certain to inflame suspicions about Finicum's death
and shake confidence in the FBI, which came under intense fire for
botched handling of violent sieges at Ruby Ridge in Idaho and Waco,
Texas.
Some supporters have claimed Finicum was shot while surrendering,
that he was unarmed and that he was shot nine times. The sheriff in
neighboring Grant County, Glenn Palmer, described the police operation
as an "ambush."
Finicum's family said in a statement a month ago that he was
"executed in cold blood" and accused police agencies of deliberately
misleading the public about what happened. His widow, Jeanette Finicum,
didn't retreat from that stance after watching the news conference.
"My husband was murdered," she said in a statement.
The attorney for Ammon Bundy, the occupation's now-jailed leader, found the news of the FBI shots troubling.
"I'm going to have to go back and reconsider all the conspiracy theories that I've written off," said the lawyer, Mike Arnold.
Investigators had planned to release police reports, interview
transcripts, photographs, the autopsy report and new video to allow the
public to evaluate the police findings in Finicum's death.
But they ended up releasing only one video and 19 photographs, citing
the new criminal investigation for the change in plans. They also
withheld the names of the involved troopers and FBI agents, saying
they've tracked up to 80 threats against them, mostly on social media.
The shooting happened after police stopped a Jeep and a pickup
carrying the key figures of the occupation along a remote stretch of
U.S. 395 north of Burns.
Finicum was driving the truck that carried carried Ryan C. Bundy, 43,
Ryan W. Payne, 32, Shawna Cox, 59, and Victoria Sharp, 18. In the Jeep
behind them was driver Mark McConnell, 37, Brian D. Cavalier, 44, and
Ammon Bundy, 40, the public face of the occupation. They were bound for a
community meeting 100 miles north of the refuge in John Day.

Officer statements and cellphone video taken by Cox from inside the
truck showed that Finicum repeatedly ignored police orders, first at the
traffic stop and then after he crashed trying to elude officers. He
nearly ran over an FBI agent before stalling in a roadside snowbank.
What happened in just seconds after that crash could lead to criminal charges against the FBI agents.
Cox's video showed that one shot hit the truck's left rear passenger
window as Finicum stepped out. At the time, Finicum appeared to have his
hands at least at shoulder height.
Investigators later established that the bullet entered the truck
through the roof before shattering the window and concluded it was fired
by an FBI agent. Another bullet from the same FBI agent apparently went
wild and missed the truck altogether, the investigation showed.
Finicum then moved toward the back of his truck and out of view of
Cox's phone, but she was still able to record what was said outside the
truck.
Officers repeatedly ordered Finicum to get on the ground, according
to the video. The investigation found that Finicum first faced a state
trooper taking cover in nearby trees, then turned toward two troopers
advancing from the highway.
Those two state troopers fired when Finicum turned back toward the
trooper in the trees while reaching for a loaded 9 mm Ruger
semi-automatic pistol inside his jacket, investigators said.
Finicum was struck from behind in the left shoulder, the left upper
back near his neck and the right lower back, a state autopsy found. The
bullet in his lower back migrated up and hit several organs, including
his heart. He died at the scene.
One of those two troopers moments earlier had fired at Finicum's
truck as it barreled toward the police roadblock. That trooper hit the
truck with three rounds, investigators concluded.
"All six shots fired by the Oregon State Police, the three into the
truck and the three that struck Mr. Finicum, are justified," said
Malheur County District Attorney Dan Norris. The shots were "in fact,
necessary," he said.
Although Norris cleared the troopers of wrongdoing, the entire
operation remains under a cloud with the disclosure of possible
misconduct by the FBI agents. Law enforcement officials tried to blunt
the impact, noting that investigating officers discovered and reported
the alleged cover-up.
Just days before announcing the investigation results, hundreds of
people gathered for weekend demonstrations scheduled in at least 35
states to protest Finicum's death. They repeated claims that police
murdered the occupation spokesman and condemned what many said is the
federal government's renewed effort to silence self-described patriots
and militia members.
They were reacting in part to 12 more arrests last week related to
the 2014 armed standoff in Nevada involving rancher Cliven Bundy, the
father of Ammon and Ryan Bundy. So far, 37 people face federal charges
related to the Oregon and Nevada standoffs.

The Finicum shooting investigation showed that the FBI and state
police jointly planned the operation when they learned on Sunday, Jan.
24, through media reports that many of the occupation leaders would be
on the road to John Day two days later.
State troopers were tasked with conducting the traffic stop at a
predesignated area, near a U.S. Forest Service road where police forces
could wait out of sight. A squad of FBI agents and troopers was assigned
to set up the road block roughly two miles north to contain any fleeing
suspects and to stop other motorists from driving into the operation.
The teams expected Finicum to be armed. He was photographed repeatedly at the refuge with a holstered handgun.
Investigators determined that five of the eight people in the Jeep
and truck carried loaded handguns. Detectives also recovered three
rifles and hundreds of rounds of ammunition from the vehicles.
Ammon Bundy didn't mention the weapons in a jailhouse interview last
week with The Oregonian/OregonLive. "We were headed with weapons of
laptops, projectors and PA systems,'' Bundy said. "We were going
peacefully to a community meeting.''
The reports showed that Bundy wasn't armed. He, Cavalier and McConnell surrendered without incident.
Finicum stopped his 2015 Dodge pickup a short distance away. Payne,
the tactical leader of the occupation, surrendered after a state trooper
fired a plastic tipped 40mm pepper spray round that struck the truck's
canopy. The other four people stayed in the idling pickup and Finicum
launched into a back-and-forth shouting match with troopers, the
investigation found.
He told troopers he was leaving to reach the sheriff in John Day. He referred to Palmer six times at the initial stop.
"The sheriff is waiting for us," he said at one point. "I'm going
over to meet the sheriff in Grant County," he said moments later.
He taunted troopers to shoot him or otherwise let him go to Palmer.
The sheriff has become something of a national hero among
anti-government protesters for appearing to support the armed occupiers
and opposing federal government control of public land.
"You want my blood on your hands?" Finicum shouted out the window of his truck.

Finicum then sped away, hitting up to 70 mph, the investigative
reports showed. Two FBI pickup trucks and one from the state police were
parked in his path down the highway, with agents and troopers arrayed
around them.
After Finicum crashed into the snowbank and left his truck, state
troopers told him at least three times to get on the ground, according
to the video. The trooper with the Taser stepped through the snow toward
Finicum.
"He was attempting to control or subdue Mr. Finicum with less lethal
force after Mr. Finicum refused orders to get on the ground," said
Deschutes County Sheriff Shane Nelson, who led the investigation into
the shooting.
Finicum repeatedly challenged police to shoot him as he moved toward them.
"You're going to have to shoot me," he said and was told again to get on the ground, the video showed.
"In the midst of that command, Mr. Finicum grabs his jacket with his
left hand and reaches with his right hand for his gun," Nelson said.
That's when the two troopers behind Finicum fired the fatal shots.
"Mr. Finicum repeatedly and knowingly made choices that put him in
this situation," said Harney County District Attorney Tim Colahan. "It
was not the outcome that any of us wanted but one he, alone, is
responsible for."